Get a new $5 yet?

Have you gotten a new $5 Federal Reserve Note in your change yet? The new bill was introduced last week on March 13.

It has not made it to Iola yet. Debbie Bradley inquired about it after the official introduction when she did some routine banking.

Lack of the new $5s in Iola is no real surprise. We are at the tail end of the distribution system and I sometimes think that old $1 bills come here to die because they can be so ratty.

Nobody wins any prizes for being the first to get one in change, but there is a certain psychological satisfaction in being the first to report one to fellow collectors and passing a personal judgment on how it looks and whether the anti-counterfeiting devices are easy to use.

Americans are not easily educated about money. That is peculiar considering how important money is to everyday life.

The iodine pens increasingly shorten the useful life of many bills. There is far less thinking involved with a pen than checking a security strip or a watermark.

The need for fairly crisp examples in ATM machines adds further strain.

Then there is the simple fact of the new designs themselves. It used to be said that $100 bills had a life of 18 years. Well, that isn’t true anymore. The new design arrived in 1996 and the old designs disappeared very rapidly, led by an almost complete rejection of the old designs in places like Russia as soon as the new ones appeared. When the next new one comes out, I expect a similar departure schedule for the current notes.

How long will the current $5 last in the face of the arrival of the new? Not long, I imagine. Next year I will probably ask whether anyone is seeing any old notes in their change.

2 Responses to Get a new $5 yet?

Dave, it’s not just Iola. I live in the Washington, DC area and have not seen the new $5 bill. Although I have not been downtown since the introduction, suburban Maryland and Virginia banks have yet to receive them.

None in change, but I did go to my credit union just to buy a few to add to the collection. All of them had inevitably been chewed on by the bill counting monster, so although uncirculated… not perfect.

In a recent article, you reminisced of taking silver coins from circulation and how it just isn’t the same with clad coins. Well if you have a few extra dollars, maybe taking crisp bills from circulation can be just as rewarding someday? Given the eventual disapperance of the older designs, I don’t see why not.

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